Home / News / 8 Ways to Keep Hands Warm While Typing on a Keyboard

8 Ways to Keep Hands Warm While Typing on a Keyboard

I’m not a doctor, and I don’t play one on TV, but there are some tried and true methods for keeping your cold hands warm while you write on a keyboard that don’t involve alcohol or lighting the room on fire (or both, in that order). Here’s a rundown.

1. Turn Up the Thermostat

Best office gloves for typing cold hands

 

This one is so obvious it’s almost condescending, but it comes up over and over again on threads like this one. Someone will post an innocent question like, “Does anyone have tips for keeping my cold hands warm while I type on a keyboard?” The wise guys usually chime in with, “Turn the heat up in the room, dummy.”

They’re mostly correct. Yes, turning up the heat will help. However, when I went to research the problems people were having while writing on keyboards in cold weather, this kind of advice didn’t cut it. If it was that obvious, no one would have this problem.

This is because of the tactile dexterity required to write on a keyboard. It’s about more than affecting the ambient temperature of the room. The solution needs to start with the cold, stiff fingers themselves.

2. Light a Candle

 

Write with cold hands and fingers

 I tried this solution myself shortly before creating The Writer’s Glove. I kept a lit candle next to the keyboard. When I felt my hands and fingers getting cold, I warmed myself up with the candle. The pleasant crackle of the wick and the scent of the wax were nice bonuses.

There’s one big downside to this method, of course. If you’re not careful, you could start a fire. It’s also more of a series of short-term fixes, rather than one long-term one, given the back-and-forth between the keyboard and the candle. Candles aren’t very portable, either, since coffee shops, your cold office and airport lounges won’t appreciate your stab at public pyrotechnics.

3. Wear Warmer Clothing

office gloves for typing

Heat from the core of the body can warm things up in the extremities, and hands and fingers writing at keyboards are no exception. It only follows that warmer clothing will enhance that effect.

However, bulky clothing isn’t always appropriate. Writing on a computer at home in layers capped off with a hooded sweatshirt is one thing. Heading into the office is another.

4. Get Up and Walk Around

Fingers too cold to type

Walking around gets the blood pumping, which can momentarily warm you up. That’s also the downside. It’s not a lasting technique, and breaking your focus isn’t helpful when you’re looking at ways to preserve your production on a keyboard.

5. Buy Fingerless Gloves

Raynaud's gloves

Fingerless gloves, as the name suggests, lack fingers. This keeps the hand warm while permitting the tactile dexterity needed to type on a keyboard, but it does leave the fingers exposed. This can defeat the point of the glove in the first place. Fingerless gloves can also be bulky, inhibiting the natural feel of the keys.

6. Consult a Doctor

Medical issues cold hands fingers

If cold hands are affecting your quality of life beyond typing at a computer keyboard, you may want to consult a medical professional. This could be a sign of a more serious condition, such as a circulation issue, Raynaud’s Disease or something else.

7. Move Somewhere Warmer

How to make fingers warm while typing on keyboard

Just kidding. Unless you’re not. In that case, let me know when I can move in.

8. Try The Writer's Glove

With The Writer’s Glove, I wanted to create something that not only kept cold hands and fingers warm while writing on a keyboard, but that also addressed the downsides on this list. It needed to be a long-term solution that fit like a second skin for easy use while meeting the practical demands of writing at a keyboard for a long stretch of time.

I’m happy to say that The Writer’s Glove does exactly that. What other writing glove can do this?

  • Keeps cold hands and fingers warm while typing on a keyboard.
  • Thin material fits like a second skin.
  • Touchscreen capability in the index fingertips.
  • Light grip on palm and gloves keeps keys and other objects from slipping.
  • Available in every color, so long as you only want black.

If you’d like to try The Writer’s Glove as a solution to keeping your cold hands and fingers warm while you write on a keyboard, I’ll be happy to send you out a pair. I won’t even charge you for shipping.

I hope this helps!

16 comments

Mar 29, 2024 • Posted by JT

My favorite solution is a heated mouse pad. I tried several from Amazon and Toasti. I love the Toasti. Only one that was warm enough.

Mar 29, 2024 • Posted by Suzane

I have this problem. My fingers get cold when typing. My room(office) temperature is 72 Far. I know I can put the heat up but I don’t like to be too warm either. I have a heavy sweater. I must have a circulation problem. What kind of test to know if my blood circulation is good or poor. Thank you

Mar 29, 2024 • Posted by Mandy

Cold hands is such a problem for me, I normally need hot tea to make progress on anything.

Jun 23, 2021 • Posted by Leanne

Hello would these work to help an accomplished piano player return to play which has been stopped because of cold fingertips ?

May 26, 2021 • Posted by Kaleb Andersen

I’d love to try out a pair, is there any chance you could send me out one? Extremely interested in your product, but weary to spend $25 on a product that I am unsure as to if it works and might be too large/small.

May 26, 2021 • Posted by Scout

Hey! I came across your post looking for a way to keep my hands warm while typing at night (I do a lot of camping but work full time as a writer) and I am so curious about your writers gloves. If you still make them, I’d love to buy a pair. And if not, thank you for inspiring me to believe there is a solution out there. Thanks!

May 26, 2021 • Posted by Jason Lowe

Hi! I’m working from home and relegated to the basement where it’s FREEZING! Googled about gloves I could type in and cam across your article where you end it with saying you’d be willing to send out a free pair or your The Writer’s Glove. I realize this article was written several years ago but figured it was worth a shot checking. If you are still doing that, I’ll happily and excitedly send you my shipping address. Thanks!

- Jason

May 26, 2021 • Posted by Marty wolfe

I so need this for fingers as I’m working at home

May 26, 2021 • Posted by Alexis Hiatt

Hi! I would really love to try your gloves if you are still offering them!! My hands are always freezing at my office. :(

May 26, 2021 • Posted by Erin Reilly

I have usually worked in the city where the buildings are quite warm. Due to the pandemic, I am working at home now which is not so warm. My fingers are so cold on the keyboard. I would love to learn more about you writer’s gloves.

Leave a comment

Sale

Unavailable

Sold Out